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Part 2.3: Dipole Moments and
Optical Activity
1
Types of Point Groups
• Nonaxial (no rotation)
- C1, Cs, Ci
• Cyclic (rotational)
-Cn, Cnv, Cnh, Sn
• Dihedral (⊥C2)
- Dn, Dnd, Dnh
• Polyhedral
- T, Th, Td, O, Oh, I, Ih
• Linear
- C∞v, D ∞h
http://symmetry.jacobs-university.de/
2
Outline
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•
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•
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Dipole Moment/Polarity
Dipole and Symmetry
Dipole and Crystals
Chirality
Circular Dichroism
Optical Activity and Symmetry
Dynamic Molecules
Applications of CD
3
Polarity/Dipole Moment
Polarity- a separation of electric charge leading to a molecule or its
chemical groups having an electric dipole moment.
Dipole moment- magnitude of charges and the distance of separation
between the charges.
A molecule will have a dipole moment (that is, it will be polar) if the
bond dipole moments do not cancel each other out.
Molecular Dipole Moment
Polar
4
Dipole Moment and Symmetry
A molecule will have a dipole moment (that is, it will be polar) if the
bond dipole moments do not cancel each other out.
Molecular dipole is dependent on symmetry!
1) Any molecule with an inversion center (i) cannot have a dipole (or be polar).
2) Any molecule with a C2 ⊥ to Cn cannot have a dipole (or be polar).
3) Any molecule with a sh cannot have a dipole (or be polar).
5
Dipole Moment and Symmetry
1) Any molecule with an inversion center (i) cannot have a
dipole (or be polar).
i
2) Any molecule with a C2 ⊥ to Cn cannot have a dipole (or be
polar).
z
y
Can have a dipole in z or –z
unless there is a ⊥ C2 or a sh
x
3) Any molecule with a sh cannot have a dipole (or be polar).
Only C1, Cs, Cn, C∞v and Cnv can have a molecular dipole and be polar.
6
Dipole Moment and Symmetry
1) Any molecule with an inversion center (i) cannot have a dipole (or be polar).
2) Any molecule with a C2 ⊥ to Cn cannot have a dipole (or be polar).
3) Any molecule with a sh cannot have a dipole (or be polar).
Only C1, Cs, Cn, C∞v and Cnv can have a molecular dipole and be polar.
7
Dipole Moment and Symmetry
Only C1, Cs, Cn, and Cnv can have a molecular dipole and be polar.
Symmetry does not tell you the direction or the magnitude of the dipole moment.
DirectionC1 could be any direction (no axis)
Cs could be direction except ⊥ to sh
Cn and Cnv must be z or -z
z
z
y
y
x
x
8
Dipole Moment and Symmetry
Only C1, Cs, Cn, and Cnv can have a molecular dipole and be polar.
Symmetry does not tell you the direction or the magnitude of the dipole moment.
Magnitude-
Direction-
Depends on the atoms, lone pairs
and bond dipoles
Cs could be any direction (no axis)
Cs could be direction except ⊥ to sh
Cn and Cnv must be z or -z
NH3
?
NF3
Bond
Dipole
Lone
pair
Molecular
Dipole
9
Dipole Moment and Symmetry
Why symmetry and dipole moment matter?
1) Solubility
2) Miscibility
3) Boiling/melting points
4) pKa
5) Vibrational Transitions
6) Crystal Structure/Property
Acetanilide
p-chloroacetanilide
10
Dipole Moment and Symmetry
AcetanilideForm pairs related by an inversion center.
Cancelation of dipoles.
p-chloroacetanilideHead to tail alignment.
Aligned dipoles.
11
Dipole Moment and Symmetry
Non-polar crystal
Polar crystal
Symmetry Through the Eyes of a Chemist
12
Dipole Moment and Symmetry
Non-polar crystal
Polar crystal
1) Solid/gas reactions
2) Melting temp
3) Hardness
4) Conductivity
5) Optical Polarity
6) Pyroelectricity
-must have dipole
7) Piezoelectricity
Symmetry Through the Eyes of a Chemist
13
Dipole Moment and Symmetry
1) Any molecule with an inversion center (i) cannot have a
dipole (or be polar).
i
2) Any molecule with a C2 ⊥ to Cn cannot have a dipole (or be
polar).
z
y
Can have a dipole in z or –z
unless there is a ⊥ C2 or a sh
x
3) Any molecule with a sh cannot have a dipole (or be polar).
Only C1, Cs, Cn, C∞v and Cnv can have a molecular dipole and be polar.
14
Optical Activity and Symmetry
• Chirality
• Circular Dichroism
• Optical Activity and
Symmetry
• Dynamic Molecules
• Applications of CD
15
Chiral Molecules
16
Why Chirality Matters
• DNA is right handed
• Amino acids are L
• Carbohydrates are D
• Alpha Helix is right handed
• Origin/Evolution of life
• Drug delivery/processing
• Olfactory receptors
17
Importance of Chiral Molecules
18
Naming Conventions
R / S, D/L and (+)/(−) are not related.
R / S system- requires no reference molecule (Cahn–Ingold–Prelog priority rules)
D/L system- referenced
vs glyceraldehyde.
(+)/(−) system- related to the direction to which it rotates plane polorized light.
(+) –rotates the plane polarized light clockwise (when viewing towards the
light source)
(-) –rotates the plane polarized light counterclockwise
19
Optical Activity
hn
hn
Sample
We don’t measure absorbance. We measure transmittance.
Sample
P0
(power in)
P
(power out)
• Transmittance:
T = P/P0
• Absorbance:
A = -log T = log P0/P
20
Beer’s Law
The Beer-Lambert Law (l specific):
A=ecl
A = absorbance (unitless, A = log10 P0/P)
e = molar absorptivity (L mol-1 cm-1)
l = path length of the sample (cm)
c = concentration (mol/L or M)
Sample
P0
P
(power in)
(power out)
l in cm
Concentration
Absorbance
Path length
Absorbance
Molar Abs.
Absorbance
21
UV-Vis Spectroscopy
Detector
Sample
End View
Unpolarized Light
22
Polarizers
23
Polarization of Light
Vertically
Polarized
Side View
End View
Horizontally
Polarized
http://www.enzim.hu/~szia/cddemo/edemo0.htm
24
Light + Molecules
Source
Strong Absorption
Weak Absorption
25
Orientation Dependent Absorption
Ph
Ph
a axis
b axis
Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2005, 44, 6564 –6568
26
Adding Polarized Light
In phase (peak at the same time) + same amplitude
Vertical + Horizontal = 45° diagonal
27
Adding Polarized Light
¼ l (90°) out of phase + same amplitude
Vertical + Horizontal = Circular
Green peaks when red baselines.
Sum (blue) is always 1.
28
l/4 Wave Plate Polarizer
l/4 Wave Plate Polarizer
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Polarization of Light
left-circularly
polarized
Side View
End View
right-circularly
polarized
30
Adding Polarized Light
In phase (peak at the same time) + same amplitude
left circular + right circular = vertical
Green peaks when red peaks.
31
Absorption Spectroscopy
P0
(power in)
P
(power out)
P
P0
Absorbance:
A = -log T = log P0/P
32
Optically Active Molecules
33
Absorption Spectroscopy
The Beer-Lambert Law:
A=ecl
A = absorbance (unitless, A = log10 P0/P)
e = molar absorptivity (L mol-1 cm-1)
l = path length of the sample (cm)
c = concentration (mol/L or M)
e is the same for D and L
If C are equal:
50:50 D to L
100% D
100% L
Then A is the same.
Assuming the light is unpolarized!
34
Circular Absorption
Absorbs Less
Larger P
left-circularly
polarized
right-circularly
polarized
Absorbs more
Smaller P
P0
(power in)
P
(power out)
35
Circular Absorption
P(left)
P0(left)
P0
(power in)
P
(power out)
Absorbance:
A(left) = log P0(left) /P(left)
A(right) = log P0(right)/P(right)
36
Circular Dichroism
CD measures the difference between the absorption of left and
right handed cirularly-polarized light:
De is typically <100 M-1 cm-1
e is typically > 10,000 cm-1
CD spectra reported in ellipticity () or De
 = 3298 Δε.
e in L/mol cm
(liters mol-1 centimeters-1)
 in degrees cm2/dmol-1 (degrees centimeters2 mol-1)
37
Circular Dichroism
Polarizer
Source
Prism
Process:
1) Unpolarized white light
2) Monochrometer
3) Plane polarizer
4) left-right modulator
5) left (then right) through sample
6) measure P for right (then left) through sample
38
CD Spectrometer
AVIV 202 CD spectrometer
Institute of Molecular Biophysics
170-875 nm
-10oC to 110oC
titrator attachment
39
Optical Activity and Symmetry
Molecules are optically active if it contains at least one chiral center.
Many molecules have no chiral centers and yet are optically active.
40
Optical Activity and Symmetry
Which molecules are expected to be optically active?
Molecules with no improper axis of rotation (Sn) are optically active.
Note S1 = σ and S2 = i.
Chiral molecules lack an improper axis of rotation (Sn), a center of
symmetry (i) or a mirror plane (σ)!
• Nonaxial (no rotation)
- C1, Cs, Ci
• Cyclic (rotational)
-Cn, Cnv, Cnh, Sn
• Dihedral (⊥C2)
- Dn, Dnd, Dnh
C1, Cn, and Dn
Also T, O, and I
• Polyhedral
- T, Th, Td, O, Oh, I, Ih
• Linear
- C∞v, D ∞h
41
Optical Activity and Symmetry
Chiral molecules lack an improper axis of rotation (Sn), a center of
symmetry (i) or a mirror plane (σ)!
C1, Cn, and Dn
42
Optical Activity and Symmetry
Chiral molecules lack an improper axis of rotation (Sn), a center of
symmetry (i) or a mirror plane (σ)!
C1, Cn, and Dn
Also T, O, and I
43
Spectra
Absorption
Circular Dichroism
44
Optical Activity and Dynamic Molecules
10^10 per second
CD spectra-average of both isomers (at room temperature).
45
Photoreaction
hn
?
46
Optical Activity and Symmetry
UV-Vis or CD
source
Absorbance (a.u.)
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
350
400
450
500
550
600
Wavelength (nm)
hn
?
47
Optical Activity and Symmetry
Absorption
CD spectrum
time
hn
?
48
Optical Activity and Symmetry
Decomposition
Photoisomerization
49
Applications
•
•
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•
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Determination of secondary structure of proteins
Investigations of protein-protein interactions
Investigation of the effect of drug binding
Protein structure in a membrane
Stereoselective synthesis
Dynamic processes
- protein folding
- reaction dynamics
• DNA denaturation
GCN4-p1 coiled–coil
50
Side Note
51
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